Thomas R. Guy, Administrator of the Estate of Vicki R. Guy, Deceased v. Commonwealth Life Insurance Company

894 F.2d 1407
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 28, 1990
Docket88-4918
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 894 F.2d 1407 (Thomas R. Guy, Administrator of the Estate of Vicki R. Guy, Deceased v. Commonwealth Life Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomas R. Guy, Administrator of the Estate of Vicki R. Guy, Deceased v. Commonwealth Life Insurance Company, 894 F.2d 1407 (5th Cir. 1990).

Opinion

EDITH H. JONES, Circuit Judge:

Commonwealth Life Insurance Company failed to pay Vicki Guy’s medical expenses in connection with her gall bladder removal. After a non-jury trial, the district court entered judgment for $2,614.00 in compensatory damages and $141,000 in punitive damages for Commonwealth’s “bad faith refusal” to pay Guy’s claim. The material issues on appeal are whether Commonwealth could rescind Guy’s medical policy ab initio for a material misrepresentation on the policy application, and whether the bad faith refusal to pay the claim is sup *1409 ported in the evidence. 2 We affirm the award of compensatory damages only.

I.

FACTS

On October 8, 1984, Commonwealth’s insurance agent Tim Walton contacted Vicki Guy at the beauty shop she owned for the purpose of selling a medical insurance policy. She had never before applied for either medical or life insurance, but she had known Walton all of his life and had shopped around for a favorable policy. In her deposition, Guy testified, and the district court found, that Walton, during the taking of her application, asked her only about her address, social security number, date of birth, and nothing else. According to Guy, Walton filled out the remainder of Commonwealth’s application without asking her another question. Guy signed the application after Walton prepared it, but she said she never read it.

Two questions on the application are pertinent to this case. First, no information was provided by Walton in response to the inquiry whether the applicant had consulted or been treated or examined by any physician or practitioner within the past five years. In response to another query, however, the application was marked that Guy had not sought treatment for or had any known indications of a gall bladder problem within the last ten years. The court found that no one from Commonwealth asked Guy whether she had been treated for a gall bladder problem, as Walton’s testimony on this issue-was inspecific.

The policy was issued by Commonwealth after a later telephone conversation with Guy to clear up some questions regarding her health. 3 Seven months later, Guy visited her doctor for severe pain, and within three days she submitted to surgery to remove her gall bladder. The hospital notes indicate a diagnosis of chronic chole-cystitis (inflammation of the gall bladder), cholelithiasis (gall stones), and acute chole-cystitis. Commonwealth’s policy would have covered $2,614.00 of the bills related to this surgery.

Commonwealth began to investigate the claim, on the suspicion that her gall bladder condition might have pre-existed issuance of the policy. Over the next few months, Commonwealth agents developed the following information. In April, 1981, Vicki Guy visited Dr. Henry Wadsworth, Sr. for pain in the right upper quadrant of her abdomen. Dr. Wadsworth made a clinical diagnosis of cholecystitis, prescribed pain medication, and put her on a gall bladder diet. Although Dr. Wadsworth, Sr. died in 1983, his son carried on the practice and advised Commonwealth that the diagnosis was not confirmed by x-rays or cholecysto-gram.

Guy’s surgeon submitted a claim and wrote a letter to Commonwealth stating that the pathology report indicated chronic cholecystitis and that the operative report indicated acute cholecystitis.

Commonwealth claims examiners obtained the opinions of both a registered nurse and a doctor on the company’s staff, who agreed that Guy’s gall bladder condition was treated in April 1981.

On September 16, 1985, the claims examiner sent a letter to Guy denying coverage on her claim because of the pre-existing gall bladder condition. This was an erroneous basis for denial, inasmuch as the policy defined pre-existing conditions as those for which treatment had been received within *1410 two years before the date of the issuance of the policy. Over three years had elapsed between Guy’s treatment by Dr. Wadsworth, Sr. and the issuance of the Commonwealth policy. The September 16 letter offered Guy an opportunity to respond to the denial.

Less than a month later, on October 10, Commonwealth formally rescinded Guy’s policy based on another provision. The letter explaining Commonwealth’s rescission rested upon Guy’s alleged misrepresentation in the policy application that she had not been treated for a gall bladder condition within the preceding ten years. The letter stated that Commonwealth would not have issued such a policy in the face of this information, and the letter was intended to accompany a check refunding Guy’s premiums. The court found that the refund check reached Guy, but that she never received the October 10 letter. Her agent Walton likewise did not see the rescission letter. Vicki Guy received a check for $555.21, representing the refunded premiums, on November 16, 1985. Guy took the check to her lawyer and eventually filed suit.

II.

RESCISSION OF THE POLICY

Commonwealth vigorously contends that Guy was bound by the agent’s erroneous statement about her prior lack of gall bladder treatment, as represented in her insurance application, and that it therefore had the right to rescind the policy based on this material misrepresentation. Miss.Code Ann. § 83-9-11 (1972). Mississippi, however, has a venerable rule that

where the agent of an insurance company undertakes the preparation of an application for insurance, and by mistake or omission, fails to correctly write down the answers to questions propounded to the applicant, the company will be bound by the knowledge acquired by the agent just as if the agent had correctly written the answers in the application, (citations omitted)
The same rule applies where the agent who undertakes the preparation of the application fills in incorrect answers without asking the applicant the questions ....

Kirkland v. Prudence Mutual Casualty Company, 186 So.2d 485, 487 (Miss.1966) (citing Jefferson Life & Casualty Co. v. Johnson, 238 Miss. 878, 120 So.2d 160, 162 (1960)). See also World Insurance Co. v. Bethea, 230 Miss. 765, 93 So.2d 624, 628 (1957); Home Insurance Co. of New York v. Thornhill, 165 Miss. 787, 144 So. 861 (1932). Walton’s decision to fill out Vicki Guy’s insurance application seems to place Commonwealth squarely within this rule.

It is true that in some of these cases, the insurance company was held to be bound by acts of its agents 4 who, although they received correct information from the prospective policyholder, nevertheless filled out the applications incorrectly. See e.g., Kirkland, 186 So.2d at 487; National Life & Accident Ins. Co. v. Miller, 484 So.2d 329, 334 (Miss.1985). Commonwealth accordingly contends that this case is different, because there is no evidence that Walton ever possessed accurate information about Guy’s medical history. She did not disclose it to him.

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Bluebook (online)
894 F.2d 1407, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-r-guy-administrator-of-the-estate-of-vicki-r-guy-deceased-v-ca5-1990.